My name is Clara Jensen, and a year ago I would have laughed outright if anyone had suggested that my marriage was already over long before I realized it. I believed in routine, in shared calendars, in quiet dinners and the unspoken assumption that loyalty was simply part of the contract. Ethan and I had been married six years, long enough that the dramatic gestures had faded into habit, but I mistook familiarity for stability. On that Tuesday night, I had fallen asleep on the couch with the television muted, the glow of the screen painting the living room in soft, colorless light.
The house was unnaturally still, the kind of quiet that feels heavy rather than peaceful. When my phone vibrated at 2:47 a.m., I reached for it without urgency, assuming it was Ethan checking in from his work trip in Las Vegas. Instead, the moment I unlocked the screen, the air seemed to leave my lungs. A photograph loaded first. There he was—my husband—standing beneath the garish neon lights of a Vegas wedding chapel, smiling in a way I hadn’t seen directed at me in months. Beside him stood Rebecca, his coworker, her head tilted toward his shoulder as they held up freshly issued marriage certificates.